A brand is the representation of you in the marketplace. Well defined, it can cut through the thousands of health messages people hear each day so that your message is heard distinct from all others.
We have said this over and over, but you have the opportunity to make and improve your own brand. And the way you principally do this is through an active and continuous conversation that you have with each of your patients, vendors, staff, and local businesses.
You start your conversation usually on your patient’s first visit. Then you continue it on the second and on successive visits thereafter. Also through newsletters. Also while doing a community event, letters, or even while shopping: “Hi Bob. How did your wife do at the 5K run?”
The conversation has to be two way. You have to listen as well as communicate. Facebook fits right into this, but you have to post more than what you copy and paste from the American Chiropractic Association or from Mercola. Pictures of babies, puppies, recipes from a patient with photos, and anything you feel genuinely passionate about. Anything endearing: “Aw, look at the cute baby.” Even a bulletin board with local stories of your patients let’s others know that you are paying attention.
Your brand is based upon how you converse with your select community, your own tribe.
Here is a great quote from Seth Godin’s book, Small is the New Big.
“Markets engage in conversations, but marketing often doesn’t. The reality is that most brands are actually monologues, not dialogues. A conversation might create a better, more robust, more useful brand but, alas, most organizations can’t handle that truth. So they do their best to do it the old way.
Big brands are dying. Little brands are doing great.”